I have been cycling my 10 gallon freshwater tank for 5 weeks. I had a previous thread about my attempts. It was not yet cycledand I’m actually pretty sure it was stalled so I was contemplating starting over, again. Then my child brought home a small male Betta, Fred, after a weekend with grandparents.
The path of least resistance is to do a fish in cycle.
I know......and I seriously considered just taking him back but here we are.
I did a massive water change to bring ammonia down to a safe range and treated the water with prime, stability and Microbe Lift Water Care to jump start the bacteria growth. I really want to do this safety and humanely so I am looking for any advice. Here’s info on my tank:
10 gallon long
Filter: Aqueon Quiet Flow 10 Power Filter with standard cartridge and foam ammonia media.
Air stone
Tetra heater set to 78 degrees
Gravel substrate
One medium piece of driftwood with a few mini Anubias attached to the wood.
I also have a few fake plants, plastic and soft.
Food - Omega One Betta Buffett Pellets
And one Red Betta now named Fred.
Day 1 -
Ammonia - .50
Nitrites- 0
Nitrates - Not tested
PH - 7.8 - 8
* I did a partial water change with prime and stability and retested the ammonia, ammonia was reduced to .25 ppm. Dosed with Bacteria
Day 2 -
Ammonia - .50 - 1.0
Nitrites- 0
PH - 7.4 - 7.8
Nitrates- Not Tested
* I did a 30% water change with prime. retested ammonia, ammonia was barely reduced but was closer to .25-.50. Dosed with bacteria.
Day 3 -
Ammonia - 1 ppm
Nitrites- .25 ppm
PH - 7.4
Nitrates - 0 ppm
* 50% water change, redosed with Prime and stability. Retested ammonia, ammonia is now .25 ppm and Nitrites are showing as blue but I’m thinking it’s somewhere between 0 and .25ppm.
Like I said I wasn’t planning on doing a fish in cycle but my kid will be devastated if we take him back, and I don’t want the cycle to kill him either so I want to make sure I do this correctly and humanely. I’m thrilled that I’m actually seeing nitrites because I never once saw nitrites during my fishless cycle attempts.
I have been acting under the guidance that during a fish in cycle, it is important to test ammonia and nitrites daily and if the ammonia reaches .50 or higher, perform a 30-50% water change, and dose with prime every 24-48 hours to keep the ammonia and nitrite neutralized and from harming the fish.
I’m on day 4 of this adventure but now I’m running into a situation where I think I’ll have to test the water multiple times per day . This morning around 8 am I tested as I always do. Ammonia was a solid 1ppm, zero nitrites, zero nitrates. I did my 50% water change with prime, retested and ammonia had barely been cut in half, which was frustrating, it was somewhere between .50 and 1ppm. I dosed with the bacteria after the water change. Around 11am, I started to get paranoid because the ammonia seems to be rising more quickly now so I retested ammonia, and I’m glad I did because ammonia was back up to 1ppm after only three hours. I did a second water change and retested just now. Ammonia is down to .50 with zero nitrites. Is this common? To have to test and water change multiple times per day? I don’t want to overdo it with water changes but I don’t want to be cruel either...PH was also much higher today, it has been in the mid 7’s and today was 8.2. Does this mean anything? I know a drop in PH can be bad but a sharp rise like that? I did not feed Fred. I’ve been feeding him three pellets every morning for the past three days but I think we will skip today and see if that helps reduce the ammonia spikes.
Any advice is appreciated.
The path of least resistance is to do a fish in cycle.
I know......and I seriously considered just taking him back but here we are.
I did a massive water change to bring ammonia down to a safe range and treated the water with prime, stability and Microbe Lift Water Care to jump start the bacteria growth. I really want to do this safety and humanely so I am looking for any advice. Here’s info on my tank:
10 gallon long
Filter: Aqueon Quiet Flow 10 Power Filter with standard cartridge and foam ammonia media.
Air stone
Tetra heater set to 78 degrees
Gravel substrate
One medium piece of driftwood with a few mini Anubias attached to the wood.
I also have a few fake plants, plastic and soft.
Food - Omega One Betta Buffett Pellets
And one Red Betta now named Fred.
Day 1 -
Ammonia - .50
Nitrites- 0
Nitrates - Not tested
PH - 7.8 - 8
* I did a partial water change with prime and stability and retested the ammonia, ammonia was reduced to .25 ppm. Dosed with Bacteria
Day 2 -
Ammonia - .50 - 1.0
Nitrites- 0
PH - 7.4 - 7.8
Nitrates- Not Tested
* I did a 30% water change with prime. retested ammonia, ammonia was barely reduced but was closer to .25-.50. Dosed with bacteria.
Day 3 -
Ammonia - 1 ppm
Nitrites- .25 ppm
PH - 7.4
Nitrates - 0 ppm
* 50% water change, redosed with Prime and stability. Retested ammonia, ammonia is now .25 ppm and Nitrites are showing as blue but I’m thinking it’s somewhere between 0 and .25ppm.
Like I said I wasn’t planning on doing a fish in cycle but my kid will be devastated if we take him back, and I don’t want the cycle to kill him either so I want to make sure I do this correctly and humanely. I’m thrilled that I’m actually seeing nitrites because I never once saw nitrites during my fishless cycle attempts.
I have been acting under the guidance that during a fish in cycle, it is important to test ammonia and nitrites daily and if the ammonia reaches .50 or higher, perform a 30-50% water change, and dose with prime every 24-48 hours to keep the ammonia and nitrite neutralized and from harming the fish.
I’m on day 4 of this adventure but now I’m running into a situation where I think I’ll have to test the water multiple times per day . This morning around 8 am I tested as I always do. Ammonia was a solid 1ppm, zero nitrites, zero nitrates. I did my 50% water change with prime, retested and ammonia had barely been cut in half, which was frustrating, it was somewhere between .50 and 1ppm. I dosed with the bacteria after the water change. Around 11am, I started to get paranoid because the ammonia seems to be rising more quickly now so I retested ammonia, and I’m glad I did because ammonia was back up to 1ppm after only three hours. I did a second water change and retested just now. Ammonia is down to .50 with zero nitrites. Is this common? To have to test and water change multiple times per day? I don’t want to overdo it with water changes but I don’t want to be cruel either...PH was also much higher today, it has been in the mid 7’s and today was 8.2. Does this mean anything? I know a drop in PH can be bad but a sharp rise like that? I did not feed Fred. I’ve been feeding him three pellets every morning for the past three days but I think we will skip today and see if that helps reduce the ammonia spikes.
Any advice is appreciated.